The first act was the introduction, where you would meet all the characters, the second is where complications arise, the third is the rising action where things leading up to the climax happen, the forth is the climax or most suspenseful point, then falling action where everything is coming to an end, then the catastrophe which usually results in the death of Shakespeare's hero.
A Shakespearean tragedy is a play; it isn't real.
No. Macbeth was classified as a Shakespearean Tragedy.
Shakespeare's longest tragedy and longest play is Hamlet.
As is usual in Shakespearean tragedy, the corpses of the protagonists remind us that this is a tragedy.
A tragedy normally centers on a single individual.
Both are written in iambic pentameter
frankly speaking....both......he was an amazing dramatist...
Most likely this is referring to the marriage of Romeo and Juliet.
Failure, adversity, misfortune, catastrophe, struggle, wreck, etc.
three quatrains and a couplet
Ram Bilas Sharma has written: 'Essays on Shakespearean tragedy'
The question sounds as if it is intnded to be a research paper.